Sweet premise, complicated by an age gap I couldn't fully set aside
The concept is genuinely inventive — a 29-year-old transported into a virtual game as a 19-year-old character, tasked with bringing happiness to someone who doesn't know any of this is happening. There's something quietly interesting about the ethics of that setup, and the series handles the sweetness of it well enough.
My personal sticking point is the age gap, which the virtual framing doesn't really resolve for me. Tae is emotionally and experientially a decade older than how he's presenting, and that asymmetry sat with me throughout in a way I couldn't fully set aside. I'm aware the series isn't asking me to think about it that hard — it's a gentle, warm story and it mostly succeeds at being that. But I notice these things and they affect how fully I can invest.
The couple landed somewhere in the middle for me, the intimate scenes didn't quite work, and by the end my engagement had drifted. Sweet while it lasted, but not something I'd return to.
My personal sticking point is the age gap, which the virtual framing doesn't really resolve for me. Tae is emotionally and experientially a decade older than how he's presenting, and that asymmetry sat with me throughout in a way I couldn't fully set aside. I'm aware the series isn't asking me to think about it that hard — it's a gentle, warm story and it mostly succeeds at being that. But I notice these things and they affect how fully I can invest.
The couple landed somewhere in the middle for me, the intimate scenes didn't quite work, and by the end my engagement had drifted. Sweet while it lasted, but not something I'd return to.
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